Election 2024: The Fate of Democracy
vinnyt77 the whole office v wfh debate will go on for years. We are all different and have different preferences, it’s def not one size fits all. Too many people stick to their preference and not prepared to accept other people have different preferences. The best companies can do is try and cater for everyone. At the end of the day we are all adults!
RichM 100% agree. Was tough during lockdown listening to folks in houseshares joining calls (in some cases) from their toilets, because it was the only free/quiet space.
I’ve been a 95% home based worker for upwards of 10 years. I’d find a proper 2-3 day hybrid model tough to get back to, but would consider it if I thought it made sense. 5 days a week in an office can get in the fucking bin.
alistair you either already do, or will work in a talent vacuum. It’s already happening at Amazon - they enforced a 5 day working week from the office and thousands have left - I’ll bet it isn’t the shit ones.
I refuse to work in the office until they relax their public masturbation policy
Old-Dutch they want an inch and you take a foot?
I feel offended that I’m asked to go to the toilet “if I want to do that”
It hurts my feelings
Along_the_Wire they want an inch and you take a foot?
Got it the wrong way round. Isn’t he the one taking an inch?
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Along_the_Wire Not at all. The younger ones living in London like being in a nice new office. Proper work stations, screens, meeting rooms, gym downstairs, fridge full of sof drinks, fresh fruit, decent coffee machines. Three days in the office (not five), more if you want.
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alistair Not at all. The younger ones living in London like being in a nice new office. Proper work stations, screens, meeting rooms, gym downstairs, fridge full of sof drinks, fresh fruit, decent coffee machines. Three days in the office (not five), more if you want.
This is the core of the corporate self-delusion. People don’t come to work for fruit, soft drinks, and coffee machines. Whether it is a new office or not doesn’t come into it — a bad workplace is a bad workplace no matter whether it is new.
Employers know full well that people aren’t any more inclined to do working lunches just because pizza is laid on.
They already have the means to do all these things. They simply pretend that these are incentive, and play along with employers that offer these as a poor alternative to the actual things they need. The same goes for corporate days out for some forced fun.
Workplaces are full of people pretending to buy in to it. The imbalance of power requires them to.
This just narrows the blinkers of employers that are high on their own supply of Kool Aid because they supplied a fridge stocked with fizzy pop.
They know that they do this because it is the cheaper alternative, and — in the case of flexibility — because they know their employer won’t relinquish control.
Meanwhile, the disenchantment grows and people leave at the first opportunity for employers that do offer something closer to what they are actually seeking.
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Anyone remember virtual events during the pandemic? Our B2B events business has never been in better health. If ever there was a barometer for people wanting to knowledge share, network and meet peers/clients. Berlin at the end of the month, Orlando in March. Accounts might be as effective from home but they have zero people skills anyway.
whatever I don’t disagree with many of these sentiments, but again - it’s too broad a brush, and sweeping. There are plenty of folks who prefer working in an office - some of them for some of the week, but some of them for all of it. Whether that’s because they don’t have room at home, have kids that’ll distract them, or they just want to be able to keep a distinct line between work and home.
The best companies, for me, acknowledge this, by providing a decent working space for those that want it when they want it, but provide total flexibility to those that don’t - and ensure their management teams are capable of running virtual teams as effectively as colocated teams.
Definitely. There are a lot of good companies that do meet different needs — and for sure, many people want to work in an office environment.
My pushback is against the idea that the companies that force a return to work in spurious grounds and think that offering a a range of beverages makes up for it.
whatever My pushback is against the idea that the companies that force a return to work in spurious grounds and think that offering a a range of beverages makes up for it.
100%. The most spurious I’ve come across was the company I was working for during the pandemic. They tried to enforce a 5 day RTO policy post pandemic, because the company had spunked £5m on an office refurb in late 2019, and they wanted to ‘get value’ out of it. Fuckwits.
I get hacked off in my office. Meeting rooms booked up everywhere and hot desks all taken by the time I get in. Fuck that for a game of soldiers. All my clients use Teams/zoom/Google anyway so why should I be in an office for that? I do go in when there’s a free drinks/food event though. That’s plenty of networking thanks. I’ve done years of commuting in and out of London and I can’t be arsed doing that any more ta.